Most Americans think President Barack Obama’s health care reform law will harm taxpayers and businesses, while helping those directly threatened by a lack of health care, according to a Gallup Poll released Monday.

Sixty percent believe the law will make things worse for taxpayers, 57 percent think it will do so for businesses, 51 percent think it will do so for doctors and 46 percent think people with health insurance will be worse off.

For those without health insurance, 59 percent think the law will help, with just under a third thinking it will hurt. Fifty-five percent think the law will benefit those who get sick, and 34 percent think it will harm them. The public is split on whether hospitals will benefit or suffer.

There’s a large partisan divide in the poll, which took place from July 9 to July 12. Republicans are actually evenly split on whether or not the legislation is helpful or harmful to those without health insurance, but a 32-percentage-point gap opens up between those who believe the law will help people who get sick and those who believe it will hurt them. That number only grows in the other categories.

Democrats are staunchest in their belief the law will help sick people. The gap between those who believe it will help and those who believe it will hurt is 67 percent.